The National - News

Manager of Omar Souleyman suspects ‘jealous rival’ behind singer’s arrest

- ANDREW WILKS Istanbul

The manager of Syrian singer Omar Souleyman on Thursday said she feared his arrest a day earlier may have been sparked by a jealous rival.

Souleyman, 55, whose mix of folk and electronic music accompanie­d by Arabic and Kurdish lyrics have won him a cult following around the world, was detained on Wednesday at his home in Sanliurfa, southern Turkey.

Turkish media reported that he was arrested on suspicion of links to the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which has waged a 37-year conflict in Turkey and is considered to be a terrorist organisati­on by Ankara and most western states.

“He has many enemies, and people who envy him who would do this,” said Mina Tosti, the singer’s manager and producer since 2010.

“This is probably a similar scenario now – that someone has made a tip-off.”

Souleyman, a former wedding singer from Hassakeh, a Kurdish-majority region of northeast Syria, has lived in Turkey since the Syrian civil war began more than 10 years ago.

He was arrested at his home in Karakopru, a district northwest of Sanliurfa, which lies close to the Syrian border.

Although a local official confirmed Souleyman’s detention, there has been no official word on the reason or circumstan­ces.

After his arrest, he underwent health checks at a local hospital before being questioned.

With his trademark red and white kaffiyeh and sunglasses, Souleyman broke on to the internatio­nal scene in 2011 and has since appeared at festivals around the world, including Glastonbur­y in the UK and the Nobel Peace Prize concert in Norway.

He has collaborat­ed with artists including Bjork, Four Tet and Blur’s Damon Albarn, while his YouTube videos have received tens of millions of views. He is believed to have recorded more than 500 albums.

Ms Tosti, who has been in touch with Souleyman’s family in Turkey since his arrest, said he was previously detained two years ago by Turkish police.

“When he was arrested in 2019, he came out [of custody] the next day,” she said. “That time they had suspected him because of a YouTube entry that was a song without video. It was a nationalis­tic Kurdish song and someone had written that it was Omar Souleyman singing. Because of this they detained him.”

Ms Tosti said she spoke to Souleyman on Tuesday, the day before his arrest, and he did not mention being under pressure from the authoritie­s.

Souleyman’s family hope his current detention will be as short as the previous time, she said, and that his release may have been delayed by the need to find a translator for the singer, who does not speak Turkish.

Ms Tosti dismissed media reports in the immediate aftermath of his arrest, with a Syrian news agency claiming it had spoken to Souleyman’s son and others citing comments by an unidentifi­ed manager.

“They stated his son named Muhammad said so-and-so – but he doesn’t have a son called Muhammad,” Ms Tosti said.

“They quote a manager and agent, but he doesn’t have a manager or agent apart from me ... his family would never pick up the phone or talk to the media.

“When this happened to him in 2019, we were all together and would never tell anyone something like this. He would not want that.”

An Arab and a Sunni Muslim, Souleyman has spoken out on behalf of all Syrians, regardless of ethnicity or religion.

Turkish media suggested he was arrested over ties to the PKK or its Syrian offshoot, known as the YPG.

Although the YPG is not designated as a terrorist organisati­on by the West, Turkey considers it inextricab­ly linked to the PKK.

Since 2016, Ankara has launched three military campaigns in northern Syria against the YPG, while also fighting the PKK in Turkey and northern Iraq.

In recent years, tens of thousands of people have been detained on terrorism charges in Turkey, including members of the Peoples’ Democratic Party, or HDP, which is Turkey’s third-largest political party.

It evolved out of the Kurdish movement and has been accused of links to the PKK – a charge it denies.

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 ?? AFP ?? Above, Omar Souleyman is escorted by police as he leaves hospital in Sanliurfa, Turkey. Below, the Syrian singer’s trademark look
AFP Above, Omar Souleyman is escorted by police as he leaves hospital in Sanliurfa, Turkey. Below, the Syrian singer’s trademark look

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